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diff --git a/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/loadbalancers.html b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/loadbalancers.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..22999c94 --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/loadbalancers.html @@ -0,0 +1,206 @@ +<html><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"><title>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo - LoadBalancer HowTo</title><meta name="author" value="Mladen Turk"><meta name="email" value="mturk@apache.org"><link href="../../style.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#525D76" alink="#525D76" vlink="#525D76"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><!--PAGE HEADER--><tr><td colspan="2"><!--TOMCAT LOGO--><a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/"><img src="../../images/tomcat.gif" align="left" alt="Apache Tomcat" border="0"></a><!--APACHE LOGO--><a href="http://www.apache.org/"><img src="http://www.apache.org/images/asf-logo.gif" align="right" alt="Apache Logo" border="0"></a></td></tr><!--HEADER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><tr><!--RIGHT SIDE MAIN BODY--><td width="80%" valign="top" align="left"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><tr><td align="left" valign="top"><h1>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo</h1><h2>LoadBalancer HowTo</h2></td><td align="right" valign="top" nowrap="true"><img src="../../images/void.gif" width="1" height="1" vspace="0" hspace="0" border="0"></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Introduction"><strong>Introduction</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>A load balancer is a worker that does not directly communicate with Tomcat. +Instead it is responsible for the management of several "real" workers, +called members or sub workers of the load balancer.</p> +<p> +This management includes: +</p> +<ul> +<li> +Instantiating the workers in the web server. +</li> +<li> +Using the worker's load-balancing factor, perform weighted load balancing +(distributing load according to defined strengths of the targets). +</li> +<li> +Keeping requests belonging to the same session executing on the same Tomcat +(session stickyness). +</li> +<li> +Identifying failed Tomcat workers, suspending requests to them and instead +falling-back on other workers managed by the load balancer. +</li> +<li> +Providing status and load metrics for the load balancer itself and all +members via the status worker interface. +</li> +<li> +Allowing to dynamically reconfigure load-balancing via the status worker +interface. +</li> +</ul> +<p> +Workers managed by the same load balancer worker are load-balanced +(based on their configured balancing factors and current request or session load) +and also secured against failure by providing failover to other members of the same +load balancer. So a single Tomcat process death will not "kill" the entire site. +</p> +<p>Some of the features provided by a load balancer are even interesting, when +only working with a single member worker (where load balancing is not possible).</p> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Basic Load Balancer Properties"><strong>Basic Load Balancer Properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p>A worker is configured as a load balancer by setting its worker <b class="code">type</b> +to <b>lb</b>. +</p> +<p> +The following table specifies some properties used to configure a load balancer worker: +</p> +<ul> +<li><b>balance_workers</b> is a comma separated list of names of the member workers of the +load balancer. These workers are typically of type <b>ajp13</b>. The member workers do +not need to appear in the <b class="code">worker.list</b> property themselves, adding the +load balancer to it suffices.</li> +<li><b>sticky_session</b> specifies whether requests with SESSION ID's should be routed +back to the same Tomcat instance that created the session. You can set sticky_session to +<b>False</b> when Tomcat is using a session manager which can share session data across +multiple instances of Tomcat - or if your application is stateless. +By default sticky_session is set to <b>True</b>.</li> +<li><b>lbfactor</b> can be added to each member worker to configure individual +strengths for the members. A higher <b class="code">lbfactor</b> will lead to more +requests being balanced to that worker. The factors must be given by integers and the +load will be distributed proportional to the factors given. Higher factors lead to +more requests.</li> +</ul> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # The load balancer worker balance1 will distribute + # load to the members worker1 and worker2 + worker.balance1.type=lb + worker.balance1.balance_workers=worker1, worker2 + worker.worker1.type=ajp13 + worker.worker1.host=myhost1 + worker.worker1.port=8009 + worker.worker2.type=ajp13 + worker.worker1.host=myhost2 + worker.worker1.port=8009 +</pre></div> + +<p><font color="#ff0000"> +Session stickyness is not implemented using a tracking table for sessions. +Instead each Tomcat instance gets an individual name and adds its name at +the end of the session id. When the load balancer sees a session id, it +finds the name of the Tomcat instance and sends the request via the correct +member worker. For this to work you must set the name of the Tomcat instances +as the value of the <b class="code">jvmRoute</b> attribute in the Engine element of +each Tomcat's server.xml. The name of the Tomcat needs to be equal to the name +of the corresponding load balancer member. In the above example, Tomcat on host +"myhost1" needs <b class="code">jvmRoute="worker1"</b>, Tomcat on host "myhost2" +needs <b class="code">jvmRoute="worker2"</b>. +</font></p> + +<p>For a complete reference of all load balancer configuration +attributes, please consult the worker <a href="../../reference/workers.html">reference</a>. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Advanced Load Balancer Worker Properties"><strong>Advanced Load Balancer Worker Properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p>The load balancer supports complex topologies and failover configurations. +Using the member attribute <b class="code">distance</b> you can group members. +The load balancer will always send a request to a member of lowest distance. +Only when all of those are broken, it will balance to the members of the +next higher configured distance. This allows to define priorities between +Tomcat instances in different data center locations. +</p> +<p>When working with shared sessions, either by using session replication +or a persisting session manager (e.g. via a database), one often splits +up the Tomcat farm into replication groups. In case of failure of a member, +the load balancer needs to know, which other members share the session. +This is configured using the <b class="code">domain</b> attribute. All workers +with the same domain are assumed to share the sessions.</p> +<p>For maintenance purposes you can tell the load balancer to not +allow any new sessions on some members, or even not use them at all. +This is controlled by the member attribute <b class="code">activation</b>. +The value <b>Active</b> allows normal use of a member, <b>disabled</b> +will not create new sessions on it, but still allow sticky requests, +and <b>stopped</b> will no longer send any requests to the member. +Switching the activation from "active" to "disabled" some time before +maintenance will drain the sessions on the worker and minimize disruption. +Depending on the usage pattern of the application, draining will take from +minutes to hours. Switching the worker to stopped immediately before +maintenance will reduce logging of false errors by mod_jk.</p> +<p>Finally you can also configure hot spare workers by using +<b class="code">activation</b> set to <b>disabled</b> in combination with +the attribute <b class="code">redirect</b> added to the other workers:</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # The advanced router LB worker + worker.list=router + worker.router.type=lb + worker.router.balance_workers=worker1,worker2 + + # Define the first member worker + worker.worker1.type=ajp13 + worker.worker1.host=myhost1 + worker.worker1.port=8009 + # Define preferred failover node for worker1 + worker.worker1.redirect=worker2 + + # Define the second member worker + worker.worker2.type=ajp13 + worker.worker2.host=myhost2 + worker.worker2.port=8009 + # Disable worker2 for all requests except failover + worker.worker2.activation=disabled +</pre></div> + +<p> +The <b class="code">redirect</b> flag on worker1 tells the load balancer +to redirect the requests to worker2 in case that worker1 has a problem. +In all other cases worker2 will not receive any requests, thus acting +like a hot standby. +</p> + +<p>A final note about setting <b class="code">activation</b> to <b>disabled</b>: +The session id coming with a request is send either +as part of the request URL (<b class="code">;jsessionid=...</b>) or via a cookie. +When using bookmarks or browsers that are running since a long time, +it is possible to send a request carrying an old and invalid session id +pointing at a disabled member. +Since the load balancer does not have a list of valid sessions, it will +forward the request to the disabled member. Thus draining takes longer than +expected. To handle such cases, you can add a Servlet filter to your web +application, which checks the request attribute <b class="code">JK_LB_ACTIVATION</b>. +This attribute contains one of the strings "ACT", "DIS" or "STP". If you +detect "DIS" and the session for the request is no longer active, delete the +session cookie and redirect using a self-referential URL. The redirected +request will then no longer carry session information and thus the load +balancer will not send it to the disabled worker. The request attribute +<b class="code">JK_LB_ACTIVATION</b> has been added in version 1.2.32.</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Status Worker properties"><strong>Status Worker properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +The status worker does not communicate with Tomcat. +Instead it is responsible for the worker management. It is +especially useful when combined with load balancer workers. +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Add the status worker to the worker list + worker.list=jkstatus + # Define a 'jkstatus' worker using status + worker.jkstatus.type=status +</pre></div> +<p>Next thing is to mount the requests to the jkstatus worker. For Apache +web servers use the:</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Add the jkstatus mount point + JkMount /jkmanager/* jkstatus +</pre></div> +<p>To obtain a higher level of security use the:</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Enable the JK manager access from localhost only + <Location /jkmanager/> + JkMount jkstatus + Order deny,allow + Deny from all + Allow from 127.0.0.1 + </Location> +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table></td></tr><!--FOOTER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><!--PAGE FOOTER--><tr><td colspan="2"><div align="center"><font color="#525D76" size="-1"><em> + Copyright © 1999-2011, Apache Software Foundation + </em></font></div></td></tr></table></body></html>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/proxy.html b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/proxy.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..043fe48a --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/proxy.html @@ -0,0 +1,312 @@ +<html><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"><title>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo - Reverse Proxy HowTo</title><meta name="author" value="Rainer Jung"><meta name="email" value="rjung@apache.org"><link href="../../style.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#525D76" alink="#525D76" vlink="#525D76"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><!--PAGE HEADER--><tr><td colspan="2"><!--TOMCAT LOGO--><a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/"><img src="../../images/tomcat.gif" align="left" alt="Apache Tomcat" border="0"></a><!--APACHE LOGO--><a href="http://www.apache.org/"><img src="http://www.apache.org/images/asf-logo.gif" align="right" alt="Apache Logo" border="0"></a></td></tr><!--HEADER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><tr><!--RIGHT SIDE MAIN BODY--><td width="80%" valign="top" align="left"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><tr><td align="left" valign="top"><h1>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo</h1><h2>Reverse Proxy HowTo</h2></td><td align="right" valign="top" nowrap="true"><img src="../../images/void.gif" width="1" height="1" vspace="0" hspace="0" border="0"></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Introduction"><strong>Introduction</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>The Apache module mod_jk and its ISAPI and NSAPI variants connect +a web server to a backend (typically Tomcat) using the AJP protocol. +The web server receives an HTTP(S) request and the module forwards +the request to the backend. This function is usually called a gateway +or a proxy, in the context of HTTP it is called a reverse proxy. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Typical Problems"><strong>Typical Problems</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>A reverse proxy is not totally transparent to the application on +the backend. For instance the host name and port the original client +(e.g. browser) needs to talk to belong to the web server and not to the +backend, so the reverse proxy talks to a different host name and port. +When the application on the backend returns content including +self-referential URLs using its own backend address and port, the +client will usually not be able to use these URLs. +</p> +<p>Another example is the client IP address, which for the web server is the +source IP of the incoming connection, whereas for the backend the +connection always comes from the web server. This can be a problem, when +the client IP is used by the backend application e.g. for security reasons. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="AJP as a Solution"><strong>AJP as a Solution</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>Most of these problems are automatically handled by the AJP protocol +and the AJP connectors of the backend. The AJP protocol transports +this communication metadata and the backend connector presents this +metadata whenever the application asks for it using Servlet API methods. +</p> +<p>The following list contains the communication metadata handled by AJP +and the ServletRequest/HttpServletRequest API calls which can be used to retrieve them: +<ul> +<li>local name: <b class="code">getLocalName()</b> and <b class="code">getLocalAddr</b>. +This is also equal to <b class="code">getServerName()</b>, unless a <b class="code">Host</b> header +is contained in the request. In this case the server name is taken from that header. +</li> +<li>local port: <b class="code">getLocalPort()</b> +This is also equal to <b class="code">getServerPort()</b>, unless a <b class="code">Host</b> header +is contained in the request. In this case the server port is taken from that header +if it contains an explicit port, or is equal to the default port of the scheme used. +</li> +<li>client address: <b class="code">getRemoteAddr()</b> +</li> +<li>client port: <b class="code">getRemotePort()</b> +The remote port was initially not supported. It is available when using mod_jk 1.2.32 +with Apache or IIS (not for the NSAPI plugin) together with Tomcat version at least +5.5.28, 6.0.20 or 7.0.0. For older versions, <b class="code">getRemotePort()</b> +will incorrectly return 0 or -1. As a workaround you can forward the remote port by setting +<b class="code">JkEnvVar REMOTE_PORT</b> and then either using +<b class="code">request.getAttribute("REMOTE_PORT")</b> instead of <b class="code">getRemotePort()</b> +or wrapping the request using a filter and overriding <b class="code">getRemotePort()</b> with +<b class="code">request.getAttribute("REMOTE_PORT")</b>. +</li> +<li>client host: <b class="code">getRemoteHost()</b> +</li> +<li>authentication type: <b class="code">getAuthType()</b> +</li> +<li>remote user: <b class="code">getRemoteUser()</b>, +if <b class="code">tomcatAuthentication="false"</b> +</li> +<li>protocol: <b class="code">getProtocol()</b> +</li> +<li>HTTP method: <b class="code">getMethod()</b> +</li> +<li>URI: <b class="code">getRequestURI()</b> +</li> +<li>HTTPS used: <b class="code">isSecure()</b>, <b class="code">getScheme()</b> +</li> +<li>query string: <b class="code">getQueryString()</b> +</li> +</ul> +The following additional SSL-related data will be made available by Apache and forwarded by mod_jk only +if you set <b class="code">SSLOptions +StdEnvVars</b>. For the certificate information you also need +to set <b class="code">SSLOptions +ExportCertData</b>. +<ul> +<li>SSL cipher: <b class="code">getAttribute(javax.servlet.request.cipher_suite)</b> +</li> +<li>SSL key size: <b class="code">getAttribute(javax.servlet.request.key_size)</b>. +Can be disabled using <b class="code">JkOptions -ForwardKeySize</b>. +</li> +<li>SSL client certificate: <b class="code">getAttribute(javax.servlet.request.X509Certificate)</b>. +If you want the whole certificate chain, then you need to also set <b class="code">JkOptions ForwardSSLCertChain</b>. +It is likely, that in this case you also need to adjust the maximal AJP packet size +using the worker attribute <a href="../../reference/workers.html">max_packet_size</a>. +</li> +<li>SSL session ID: <b class="code">getAttribute(javax.servlet.request.ssl_session)</b>. +This is for Tomcat, it has not yet been standardized. +</li> +</ul> +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Fine Tuning"><strong>Fine Tuning</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>In some situations this is not enough though. Assume there is another +less clever reverse proxy in front of your web server, for instance an +HTTP load balancer or similar device which also serves as an SSL accelerator. +</p> +<p>Then you are sure that all your clients use HTTPS, but your web server doesn't +know about that. All it can see is requests coming from the accelerator using +plain HTTP. +</p> +<p>Another example would be a simple reverse proxy in front of your web server, +so that the client IP address that your web server sees is always the IP address +of this reverse proxy, and not of the original client. Often such reverse proxies +generate an additional HTTP header, like <b class="code">X-Forwareded-for</b> which +contains the original client IP address (or a list of IP addresses, if there are +more cascading reverse proxies in front). It would be nice, if we could use the +content of such a header as the client IP address to pass to the backend. +</p> +<p>So we might need to manipulate some of the data that AJP sends to the backend. +When using mod_jk inside Apache httpd you can use several httpd environment +variables to let mod_jk know, which data it should forward. These environment variables +can be set by the httpd directives SetEnv or SetEnvIf, but also in a very flexible +way using mod_rewrite (since httpd 2.x it can not only test against environment +variables, but also set them). +</p> +<p>The following list contains all environment variables mod_jk checks, before +sending data to the backend: +<ul> +<li>JK_LOCAL_NAME: the local name +</li> +<li>JK_LOCAL_PORT: the local port +</li> +<li>JK_REMOTE_HOST: the client host +</li> +<li>JK_REMOTE_ADDR: the client address +</li> +<li>JK_AUTH_TYPE: the authentication type +</li> +<li>JK_REMOTE_USER: the remote user +</li> +<li>HTTPS: On (case-insensitive) to indicate, that HTTPS is used +</li> +<li>SSL_CIPHER: the SSL cipher +</li> +<li>SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE: the SSL key size +</li> +<li>SSL_CLIENT_CERT: the SSL client certificate +</li> +<li>SSL_CLIENT_CERT_CHAIN_: prefix of variable names, containing +the client cerificate chain +</li> +<li>SSL_SESSION_ID: the SSL session ID +</li> +</ul> +</p> +<p>Remember: in general you don't need to set them. The module retrieves the data automatically +from the web server. Only in case you want to change this data, you can overwrite it by +using these variables. +</p> +<p>Some of these variables might also be used by other web server modules. All +variables whose name does not begin with "JK" are set directly by Apache httpd. +If you want to change the data, but do not want to negatively influence the behaviour +of other modules, you can change the names of all variables mod_jk uses to private ones. +For the details see the <a href="../../reference/apache.html">Apache reference</a> page. +</p> +<p>All variables, that are not SSL-related have only been introduced in version 1.2.27. +</p> +<p>Finally there is a shortcut to forward the local IP of the web server as the remote IP. +This can be useful, e.g. when using the Tomcat remote address valve for allowing connections +only from registered Apache web servers. This feature is activated by setting +<b class="code">JkOptions ForwardLocalAddress</b>. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Tomcat AJP Connector Settings"><strong>Tomcat AJP Connector Settings</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>As an alternative to using the environment variables described in the previous section +(which do only exist when using Apache httpd), you can also configure Tomcat to overwrite +some of the communications data forwarded by mod_jk. The AJP connector in Tomcat's <b class="code">server.xml</b> +allows to set the <a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-6.0-doc/config/ajp.html#Attributes">following properties</a>: +<ul> +<li>proxyName: server name as returned by <b class="code">getServerName()</b> +</li> +<li>proxyPort: server port as returned by <b class="code">getServerPort()</b> +</li> +<li>scheme: protocol scheme as returned by <b class="code">getScheme()</b> +</li> +<li>secure: set to "true", if you wish <b class="code">isSecure()</b> to return "true". +</li> +</ul> +Remember: in general you don't need to set those. AJP automatically handles all cases +where the web server running mod_jk knows the right data. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="URL Handling"><strong>URL Handling</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="URL Rewriting"><strong>URL Rewriting</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p>Sometimes one want to change path components of the URLs under which an application +is available. Especially if a web application is deployed as some context, say <b class="code">/myapp</b>, +marketing prefers short URLs, so want the application to be directly available under +<b class="code">http://www.mycompany.com/</b>. Although you can deploy the application as the so-called +ROOT context, which will be directly available at "/", admins often prefer not to use +the ROOT context, e.g. because only one application can be the root context (per host). +</p> +<p>The procedure to change the URLs in the reverse proxy is tedious, because often +an application produces self-referential URLs, which then include the path components +which you tried to hide to the outside world. Nevertheless, if you absolutely need to do it, +here are the steps. +</p> +<p>Case A: You need to make the application available at a simple URL, but it is OK, if +users proceed using the more complex URLs, as long as they don't have to type them in. +That's the easy case, and if this suffices to you, you're lucky. Use a simply RedirectMatch +for Apache httpd: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +RedirectMatch ^/$ http://www.mycompany.com/myapp/ +</pre></div> +<p>Your application will then be available under <b class="code">http://www.mycompany.com/</b>, +and each visitor will be immediately redirected to the real URL +<b class="code">http://www.mycompany.com/myapp/</b> +</p> +<p>Case B: You need to hide path components for all requests going to the application. +Here's the recipe for the case, where you want to hide the first path component +<b class="code">/myapp</b>. More complex manipulations are left as an exercise to the reader. +First the solution for the case of Apache httpd: +</p> +<p>1. Use <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_rewrite.html"><b class="code">mod_rewrite</b></a> +to add <b class="code">/myapp</b> to all requests before forwarding to the backend: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +# Don't forget the PT flag! (pass through) +RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://www.mycompany.com/myapp/$1 [PT] +</pre></div> +<p>2. Use <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_headers.html"><b class="code">mod_headers</b></a> +to rewrite any HTTP redirects your application might return. Such redirects typically contain +the path components you want to hide, because by the HTTP standard, redirects always need to include +the full URL, and your application is not aware of the fact, that your clients talk to it via +some shortened URL. An HTTP redirect is done with a special response header named <b class="code">Location</b>. +We rewrite the Location headers of our responses: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +# Keep protocol, server and port if present, +# but insert our webapp name before the rest of the URL +Header edit Location ^([^/]*//[^/]*)?/(.*)$ $1/myapp/$2 +</pre></div> +<p>3. Use <b class="code">mod_headers</b> again, to rewrite the paths contained in any cookies, +your application might set. Such cookie paths again might contain +the path components you want to hide. +A cookie is set with the HTTP response header named <b class="code">Set-Cookie</b>. +We rewrite the Set-Cookie headers of our responses: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +# Fix the cookie path +Header edit Set-Cookie "^(.*; Path=/)(.*)" $1/myapp/$2 +</pre></div> +<p>3. Some applications might contain hard coded absolute links. +In this case check, whether you find a configuration item for your web framework +to configure the base URL. If not, your only chance is to parse all response +content bodies and do search and replace. This is fragile and very resource intensive. +If you really need to do this, you can use +<a href="http://apache.webthing.com/mod_proxy_html/"><b class="code">mod_proxy_html</b></a>, +<a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_substitute.html"><b class="code">mod_substitute</b></a> +or <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/basant/entry/using_mod_sed_to_filter"><b class="code">mod_sed</b></a> +for this task. +</p> +<p>If you are using Microsoft IIS as a web server, the ISAPI plugin provides a way +of doing the first step with a builtin feature. You define a mapping file for simple prefix +changes like this: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +# Add a context prefix to all requests ... +/=/myapp/ +# ... or change some prefix ... +/oldapp/=/myapp/ +</pre></div> +<p>and then put the name of the file in the <b class="code">rewrite_rule_file</b> entry of the registry or your +<b class="code">isapi_redirect.properties</b> file. In you <b class="code">uriworkermap.properties</b> file, you +still need to map the URLs as they are before rewriting! +</p> +<p>More complex rewrites can be done using the same file, but with regular expressions. A leading +tilde sign '<b class="code">~</b>', indicates, that you are using a regular expression: +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> +# Use a regular expression rewrite +~/oldapps([0-9]*)/=/newapps$1/ +</pre></div> +<p>There is no support for Steps 2 (rewriting redirect responses) or 3 (rewriting cookie paths). +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="URL Encoding"><strong>URL Encoding</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p>Some types of problems are triggered by the use of encoded URLs +(see <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding">percent encoding</a>). +For the same location there exist +a lot of different URLs which are equivalent. The reverse proxy needs to inspect the URL in order +to apply its own authentication rules and to decide, to which backend it should send the request +(or whether it should handle it itself). Therefore the request URL first is normalized: +percent encoded characters are decoded, <b class="code">/./</b> is replaced by <b class="code">/</b>, +<b class="code">/XXX/../</b> is replaced by <b class="code">/</b> and similar manipulations of the URL are done. +After that, the web server might apply rewrite rules to further change the URL in less obvious ways. +Finally there is no more way to put the resulting URL in an encoding, which is "similar" to +the one which was used for the original URL. +</p> +<p> +For historical reasons, there have been several alternatives, how mod_jk and the ISAPI +plugin encoded the resulting URL before sending it to the backend. They could be chosen via +<b class="code">JkOptions</b> (Apache httpd) or <b class="code">uri_select</b> (ISAPI). None of those historical +encodings are recommended, because they have either negative functionality implications or +pose a security risk. The default encoding since version 1.2.24 is <b class="code">ForwardURIProxy</b> +(Apache httpd) or <b class="code">proxy</b> (ISAPI) and it is strongly recommended to keep the default +and remove all old explicit settings. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Request Attributes"><strong>Request Attributes</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p> +You can also add more attributes to any request you are forwarding when using Apache httpd. +For this use the <b class="code">JkEnvVar</b> directive (for details see the +<a href="../../reference/apache.html">Apache reference</a> page). Such request attributes can be +retrieved on the Tomcat side via request.getAttribute(attributeName). +Note that their names will not be listed in request.getAttributeNames()! +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table></td></tr><!--FOOTER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><!--PAGE FOOTER--><tr><td colspan="2"><div align="center"><font color="#525D76" size="-1"><em> + Copyright © 1999-2011, Apache Software Foundation + </em></font></div></td></tr></table></body></html>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/quick.html b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/quick.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c9d95c9b --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/quick.html @@ -0,0 +1,130 @@ +<html><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"><title>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo - Quick Start HowTo</title><meta name="author" value="Henri Gomez"><meta name="email" value="hgomez@apache.org"><link href="../../style.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#525D76" alink="#525D76" vlink="#525D76"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><!--PAGE HEADER--><tr><td colspan="2"><!--TOMCAT LOGO--><a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/"><img src="../../images/tomcat.gif" align="left" alt="Apache Tomcat" border="0"></a><!--APACHE LOGO--><a href="http://www.apache.org/"><img src="http://www.apache.org/images/asf-logo.gif" align="right" alt="Apache Logo" border="0"></a></td></tr><!--HEADER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><tr><!--RIGHT SIDE MAIN BODY--><td width="80%" valign="top" align="left"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><tr><td align="left" valign="top"><h1>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo</h1><h2>Quick Start HowTo</h2></td><td align="right" valign="top" nowrap="true"><img src="../../images/void.gif" width="1" height="1" vspace="0" hspace="0" border="0"></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Introduction"><strong>Introduction</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + This document describes the configuration files used by JK on the + Web Server side for the 'impatient': + <ul> + <li> + <b>workers.properties</b> is a mandatory file used by the webserver and which + is the same for all JK implementations (Apache/IIS/NES). + </li> + <li> + <b>web server</b> add-ons to be set on the webserver side. + </li> + </ul> +</p> +<p> + We'll give here minimum servers configuration and an example <b>workers.properties</b> + to be able to install and check quickly your configuration. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Minimum workers.properties"><strong>Minimum workers.properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + Here is a minimum <b>workers.properties</b>, using just ajp13 to connect your Apache webserver + to the Tomcat engine, complete documentation is available in <a href="workers.html">Workers HowTo</a>. +</p> +<p> +<div class="example"><pre> + + # Define 1 real worker using ajp13 + worker.list=worker1 + # Set properties for worker1 (ajp13) + worker.worker1.type=ajp13 + worker.worker1.host=localhost + worker.worker1.port=8009 + +</pre></div> +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Minimum Apache web server configuration"><strong>Minimum Apache web server configuration</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + Here is a minimum information about Apache configuration, a + more complete <a href="../../webserver_howto/apache.html">separate HowTo for Apache</a> is available. +</p> +<p> + You should first have <b>mod_jk.so</b> (unix) or <b>mod_jk.dll</b> (Windows) installed + in your Apache module directory (see your Apache documentation to locate it). +</p> +<p> + Usual locations for modules directory on Unix: + <ul> + <li>/usr/lib/apache/</li> + <li>/usr/lib/apache2/</li> + <li>/usr/local/apache/libexec/</li> + </ul> +</p> +<p> + Usual locations for modules directory on Windows : + <ul> + <li>C:\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache\modules\</li> + <li>C:\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache2\modules\</li> + </ul> +</p> +<p> + You'll find a link to prebuilt binaries + <a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/download-connectors.cgi/">here</a> +</p> +<p> + Here is the minimum which should be set in <b>httpd.conf</b> directly or + included from another file: +</p> +<p> + Usual locations for configuration directory on Unix: + <ul> + <li>/etc/httpd/conf/</li> + <li>/etc/httpd2/conf/</li> + <li>/usr/local/apache/conf/</li> + </ul> +</p> +<p> + Usual locations for configuration directory on Windows : + <ul> + <li>C:\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache\conf\</li> + <li>C:\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache2\conf\</li> + </ul> +</p> +<p> +<div class="example"><pre> + + # Load mod_jk module + # Update this path to match your modules location + LoadModule jk_module libexec/mod_jk.so + # Declare the module for <IfModule directive> (remove this line on Apache 2.x) + AddModule mod_jk.c + # Where to find workers.properties + # Update this path to match your conf directory location (put workers.properties next to httpd.conf) + JkWorkersFile /etc/httpd/conf/workers.properties + # Where to put jk shared memory + # Update this path to match your local state directory or logs directory + JkShmFile /var/log/httpd/mod_jk.shm + # Where to put jk logs + # Update this path to match your logs directory location (put mod_jk.log next to access_log) + JkLogFile /var/log/httpd/mod_jk.log + # Set the jk log level [debug/error/info] + JkLogLevel info + # Select the timestamp log format + JkLogStampFormat "[%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y] " + # Send everything for context /examples to worker named worker1 (ajp13) + JkMount /examples/* worker1 + +</pre></div> +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Minimum IIS web server configuration"><strong>Minimum IIS web server configuration</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + A separate <a href="../../webserver_howto/iis.html">HowTo for the IIS web server</a> is available. +</p> +<p class="todo"> + This paragraph has not been written yet, but <b>you</b> can contribute to it. + </p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Minimum NES/iPlanet/Sun web server configuration"><strong>Minimum NES/iPlanet/Sun web server configuration</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + A separate <a href="../../webserver_howto/nes.html">HowTo for the Netscape/iPlanet/Sun web server</a> is available. +<p class="todo"> + This paragraph has not been written yet, but <b>you</b> can contribute to it. + </p> +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Test your configuration"><strong>Test your configuration</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> + (Re)start the web server and browse to the <a href="http://localhost/examples/">http://localhost/examples/</a> +</p> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table></td></tr><!--FOOTER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><!--PAGE FOOTER--><tr><td colspan="2"><div align="center"><font color="#525D76" size="-1"><em> + Copyright © 1999-2011, Apache Software Foundation + </em></font></div></td></tr></table></body></html>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/timeouts.html b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/timeouts.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..17ab68fe --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/timeouts.html @@ -0,0 +1,373 @@ +<html><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"><title>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo - Timeouts HowTo</title><meta name="author" value="Rainer Jung"><meta name="email" value="rjung@apache.org"><link href="../../style.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#525D76" alink="#525D76" vlink="#525D76"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><!--PAGE HEADER--><tr><td colspan="2"><!--TOMCAT LOGO--><a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/"><img src="../../images/tomcat.gif" align="left" alt="Apache Tomcat" border="0"></a><!--APACHE LOGO--><a href="http://www.apache.org/"><img src="http://www.apache.org/images/asf-logo.gif" align="right" alt="Apache Logo" border="0"></a></td></tr><!--HEADER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><tr><!--RIGHT SIDE MAIN BODY--><td width="80%" valign="top" align="left"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><tr><td align="left" valign="top"><h1>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo</h1><h2>Timeouts HowTo</h2></td><td align="right" valign="top" nowrap="true"><img src="../../images/void.gif" width="1" height="1" vspace="0" hspace="0" border="0"></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Introduction"><strong>Introduction</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<p>Setting communication timeouts is very important to improve the +communication process. They help to detect problems and stabilise +a distributed system. JK can use several different timeout types, which +can be individually configured. For historical reasons, all of them are +disabled by default. This HowTo explains their use and gives +hints how to find appropriate values. +</p> +<p>All timeouts can be configured in the workers.properties file. +For a complete reference of all worker configuration +items, please consult the worker <a href="../../reference/workers.html">reference</a>. +This page assumes, that you are using at least version 1.2.16 of JK. +Dependencies on newer versions will be mentioned where necessary. +</p> +<p><font color="#ff0000"> +Do not set timeouts to extreme values. Very small timeouts will likely +be counterproductive. +</font></p> +<p><font color="#ff0000"> +Long Garbage Collection pauses on the backend do not make a good +fit with some timeouts. Try to optimise your Java memory and GC settings. +</font></p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="JK Timeout Attributes"><strong>JK Timeout Attributes</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="CPing/CPong"><strong>CPing/CPong</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +CPing/CPong is our notion for using small test packets to check the +status of backend connections. JK can use such test packets directly after establishing +a new backend connection (connect mode) and also directly before each request gets +send to a backend (prepost mode). +Starting with version 1.2.27 it can also be used when a connection was idle +for a long time (interval mode). +The maximum waiting time (timeout) for a CPong answer to a CPing and the idle +time in interval mode can be configured. +</p> +<p> +The test packets will be answered by the backend very fast with a minimal amount of +needed processing resources. A positive answer tells us, that the backend can be reached +and is actively processing requests. It does not detect, if some context is deployed +and working. The benefit of CPing/CPong is a fast detection of a communication +problem with the backend. The downside is a slightly increased latency. +</p> +<p> +The worker attribute <b>ping_mode</b> can be set to a combination of characters +to determine, in which situations test packets are used: +<ul> +<li><b>C</b>: connect mode, timeout <b>ping_timeout</b> overwritten by <b>connect_timeout</b></li> +<li><b>P</b>: prepost mode, timeout <b>ping_timeout</b> overwritten by <b>prepost_timeout</b></li> +<li><b>I</b>: interval mode, timeout <b>ping_timeout</b>, idle time <b>connection_ping_interval</b></li> +<li><b>A</b>: all modes</li> +</ul> +</p> +<p> +Multiple values must be concatenated without any separator characters. +We recommend using all CPing tests. If your application is very latency sensitive, then +you should only use the combination of connect and interval mode. +</p> +<p> +Activating the CPing probing via <b>ping_mode</b> has been added in version 1.2.27. +For older versions only the connect and prepost modes exist and must be activated by +explicitely setting <b>connect_timeout</b> and <b>prepost_timeout</b>. +</p> +<p> +The worker attribute <b>ping_timeout</b> sets the default wait timeout +in milliseconds for CPong for all modes. By default the value is "10000" +milliseconds. The value only gets used, if you activate CPing/Cpong probes +via <b>ping_mode</b>. The default value should be fine, except if you experience +very long Java garbage collection pauses. +Depending on your network latency and stability, good custom values +often are between 5000 and 15000 milliseconds. +You can overwrite the timeout used for connect and prepost mode with +<b>connect_timeout</b> and <b>prepost_timeout</b>. +Remember: don't use extremely small values. +</p> +<p> +The worker attribute <b>connect_timeout</b> sets the wait timeout +in milliseconds for CPong during connection establishment. You can use it +if you want to overwrite the general timeout set with <b>ping_timeout</b>. +To use connect mode CPing, you need to enable it via <b>ping_mode</b>. +Since JK usually uses persistent connections, opening new connections is a +rare event. We therefore recommend activating connect mode. +Depending on your network latency and stability, good values often +are between 5000 and 15000 milliseconds. +Remember: don't use extremely small values. +</p> +<p> +The worker attribute <b>prepost_timeout</b> sets the wait timeout +in milliseconds for CPong before request forwarding. You can use it +if you want to overwrite the general timeout set with <b>ping_timeout</b>. +To use prepost mode CPing, you need to enable it via <b>ping_mode</b>. +Activating this type of CPing/CPong adds a small latency to each +request. Usually this is small enough and the benefit of CPing/CPong is more important. +So in general we also recommend using <b>prepost_timeout</b>. +Depending on your network latency and stability, good values often +are between 5000 and 10000 milliseconds. +Remember: don't use extremely small values. +</p> +<p> +Until version 1.2.27 <b>ping_mode</b> and <b>ping_timeout</b> did not +exist and to enable connect or prepost mode CPing you had to set <b>connect_timeout</b> +respectively <b>prepost_timeout</b> to some reasonable positive value. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Low-Level TCP Timeouts"><strong>Low-Level TCP Timeouts</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Some platforms allow to set timeouts for all operations on TCP sockets. +This is available for Linux and Windows, other platforms do not support this, +e.g. Solaris. If your platform supports TCP send and receive timeouts, +you can set them using the worker attribute <b>socket_timeout</b>. +You can not set the two timeouts to different values. +</p> +<p> +JK will accept this attribute even if your platform does not support +socket timeouts. In this case setting the attribute will have no effect. +By default the value is "0" and the timeout is disabled. +You can set the attribute to some seconds value (not: milliseconds). +JK will then set the send and the receive timeouts of the backend +connections to this value. The timeout is low-level, it is +used for each read and write operation on the socket individually. +</p> +<p> +Using this attribute will make JK react faster to some types of network problems. +Unfortunately socket timeouts have negative side effects, because for most +platforms, there is no good way to recover from such a timeout, once it fired. +For JK there is no way to decide, if this timeout fired because of real network +problems, or only because it didn't receive an answer packet from a backend in time. +So remember: don't use extremely small values. +</p> +<p> +For the general case of connection establishment you can use +<b>socket_connect_timeout</b>. It takes a millisecond value and works +on most platforms, even if <b>socket_timeout</b> is not supported. +We recommend using <b>socket_connect_timeout</b> because in some network +failure situations failure detection during connection establishment +can take several minutes due to TCP retransmits. Depending on the quality +of your network a timeout somewhere between 1000 and 5000 milliseconds +should be fine. Note that <b class="code">socket_timeout</b> is in seconds, and +<b class="code">socket_connect_timeout</b> in milliseconds. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Connection Pools and Idle Timeouts"><strong>Connection Pools and Idle Timeouts</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +JK handles backend connections in a connection pool per web server process. +The connections are used in a persistent mode. After a request completed +successfully we keep the connection open and wait for the next +request to forward. The connection pool is able to grow according +to the number of threads that want to forward requests in parallel. +</p> +<p> +Most applications have a varying load depending on the hour of the day +or the day of the month. Other reasons for a growing connection pool +would be temporary slowness of backends, leading to an increasing +congestion of the frontends like web servers. Many backends use a dedicated +thread for each incoming connection they handle. So usually one wants the +connection pool to shrink, if the load diminishes. +</p> +<p> +JK allows connections in the pool to get closed after some idle time. +This maximum idle time can be configured with the attribute +<b>connection_pool_timeout</b> which is given in units of seconds. +The default value is "0", which disables closing idle connections. +</p> +<p> +We generally recommend values around 10 minutes, so setting +<b>connection_pool_timeout</b> to 600 (seconds). If you use this attribute, +please also set the attribute <b>connectionTimeout</b> in the AJP +Connector element of your Tomcat server.xml configuration file to +an analogous value. <b>Caution</b>: connectionTimeout is in milliseconds. +So if you set JK connection_pool_timeout to 600, you should set Tomcat +connectionTimeout to 600000. +</p> +<p> +JK connections do not get closed immediately after the timeout passed. +Instead there is an automatic internal maintenance task +running every 60 seconds, that checks the idle status of all connections. +The 60 seconds interval +can be adjusted with the global attribute worker.maintain. We do not +recommend to change this value, because it has a lot of side effects. +Until version 1.2.26, the maintenance task only runs, if requests get +processed. So if your web server has processes that do not receive any +requests for a long time, there is no way to close the idle connections +in its pool. Starting with version 1.2.27 you can configure an independent +watchdog thread when using Apache 2.x with threaded APR or IIS. +</p> +<p> +The maximum connection pool size can be configured with the +attribute <b>connection_pool_size</b>. We generally do not recommend +to use this attribute in combination with Apache httpd. For +Apache httpd we automatically detect the number of threads per +process and set the maximum pool size to this value. For IIS we use +a default value of 250 (before version 1.2.20: 10), +for the Sun Web Server the default is "1". +We strongly recommend adjusting this value for IIS and the Sun Web Server +to the number of requests one web server process should +be able to send to a backend in parallel. You should measure how many connections +you need during peak hours without performance problems, and then add some +percentage depending on your growth rate etc. Finally you should check, +whether your web server processes are able to use at least as many threads, +as you configured as the pool size. +</p> +<p> +The JK attribute <b>connection_pool_minsize</b> defines, +how many idle connections remain when the pool gets shrunken. +By default this is half of the maximum pool size. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Firewall Connection Dropping"><strong>Firewall Connection Dropping</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +One particular problem with idle connections comes from firewalls, that +are often deployed between the web server layer and the backend. +Depending on their configuration, they will silently drop +connections from their status table if they are idle for to long. +</p> +<p> +From the point of view of JK and of the web server, the other side +simply doesn't answer any traffic. Since TCP is a reliable protocol +it detects the missing TCP ACKs and tries to resend the packets for +a relatively long time, typically several minutes. +</p> +<p> +Many firewalls will allow connection closing, even if they dropped +the connection for normal traffic. Therefore you should always use +<a href="#Connection Pools and Idle Timeouts">connection_pool_timeout and +connection_pool_minsize</a> on the JK side +and connectionTimeout on the Tomcat side. +</p> +<p> +Furthermore using the boolean attribute <b>socket_keepalive</b> you can +set a standard socket option, that automatically sends TCP keepalive packets +after some idle time on each connection. By default this is set to "False". +If you suspect idle connection drops by firewalls you should set this to +"True". +</p> +<p> +Unfortunately the default intervals and algorithms for these packets +are platform specific. You might need to inspect TCP tuning options for +your platform on how to control TCP keepalive. +Often the default intervals are much longer than the firewall timeouts +for idle connections. Nevertheless we recommend talking to your firewall +administration and your platform administration in order to make them agree +on good configuration values for the firewall and the platform TCP tuning. +</p> +<p> +In case none of our recommendations help and you are definitively having +problems with idle connection drops, you can disable the use of persistent +connections when using JK together with Apache httpd. For this you set +"JkOptions +DisableReuse" in your Apache httpd configuration. +This will have a huge negative performance impact! +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Reply Timeout"><strong>Reply Timeout</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +JK can also use a timeout on request replies. This timeout does not +measure the full processing time of the response. Instead it controls, +how much time between consecutive response packets is allowed. +</p> +<p> +In most cases, this is what one actually wants. Consider for example +long running downloads. You would not be able to set an effective global +reply timeout, because downloads could last for many minutes. +Most applications though have limited processing time before starting +to return the response. For those applications you could set an explicit +reply timeout. Applications that do not harmonise with reply timeouts +are batch type applications, data warehouse and reporting applications +which are expected to observe long processing times. +</p> +<p><font color="#ff0000"> +If JK aborts waiting for a response, because a reply timeout fired, +there is no way to stop processing on the backend. Although you free +processing resources in your web server, the request +will continue to run on the backend - without any way to send back a +result once the reply timeout fired. +</font></p> +<p> +JK uses the worker attribute <b>reply_timeout</b> to set reply timeouts. +The default value is "0" (timeout disabled) and you can set it to any +millisecond value. +</p> +<p> +In combination with Apache httpd, you can also set a more flexible reply_timeout +using an httpd environment variable. If you set the variable JK_REPLY_TIMEOUT +to some integer value, this value will be used instead of the value in +the worker configuration. This way you can set reply timeouts more flexible +with mod_setenvif and mod_rewrite depending on URI, query string etc. +If the environment variable JK_REPLY_TIMEOUT is not set, or is set to a +negative value, the default reply timeout of the worker will be used. If +JK_REPLY_TIMEOUT contains the value "0", then the reply timeout will be disabled +for the request. +</p> +<p> +In combination with a load balancing worker, JK will disable a member +worker of the load balancer if a reply timeout fires. The worker will then +no longer be used until it gets recovered during the next automatic +maintenance task. Starting with JK 1.2.24 you can improve this behaviour using +<b><a href="../../reference/workers.html">max_reply_timeouts</a></b>. This +attribute will allow occasional long running requests without disabling the +worker. Only if those requests happen to often, the worker gets disabled by the +load balancer. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Load Balancer Error Detection"><strong>Load Balancer Error Detection</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<br> +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Local and Global Error States"><strong>Local and Global Error States</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +A load balancer worker does not only have the ability to balance load. +It also handles stickyness and failover of requests in case of errors. +When a load balancer detects an error on one of its members, it needs to +decide, whether the error is serious, or only a temporary error or maybe +only related to the actual request that was processed. Temporary errors +are called local errors, serious errors will be called global errors. +</p> +<p> +If the load balancer decides that a backend should be put into the global error +state, then the web server will not send any more requests there. If no session +replication is used, this means that all user sessions located on the respective +backend are no longer available. The users will be send to another backend +and will have to login again. So the global error state is not transparent to the +users. The application is still available, but users might loose some work. +</p> +<p> +In some cases the decision between local error and global error is easy. +For instance if there is an error sending back the response to the client (browser), +then it is very unlikely that the backend is broken. +So this situation is a typical example of a local error. +</p> +<p> +Some situations are harder to decide though. If the load balancer can't establish +a new connection to a backend, it could be because of a temporary overload situation +(so no more free threads in the backend), or because the backend isn't alive any more. +Depending on the details, the right state could either be local error or global error. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Error Escalation Time"><strong>Error Escalation Time</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Until version 1.2.26 most errors were interpreted as global errors. +Starting with version 1.2.27 many errors which were previously interpreted as global +were switched to being local whenever the backend is still busy. Busy means, that +other concurrent requests are send to the same backend (successful or not). +</p> +<p> +In many cases there is no perfect way of making the decision +between local and global error. The load balancer simply doesn't have enough information. +In version 1.2.28 you can now tune, how fast the load balancer switches from local error to +global error. If a member of a load balancer stays in local error state for too long, +the load balancer will escalate it into global error state. +</p> +<p> +The time tolerated in local error state is controlled by the load balancer attribute +<b>error_escalation_time</b> (in seconds). The default value is half of <b>recover_time</b>, +so unless you changed <b>recover_time</b> the default is 30 seconds. +</p> +<p> +Using a smaller value for <b>error_escalation_time</b> will make the load balancer react +faster to serious errors, but also carries the risk of more often loosing sessions +in not so serious situations. You can lower <b>error_escalation_time</b> down to 0 seconds, +which means all local errors which are potentially serious are escalated to global errors +immediately. +</p> +<p> +Note that without good basic error detection the whole escalation procedure is useless. +So you should definitely use <b>socket_connect_timeout</b> and activate CPing/CPong +with <b>ping_mode</b> and <b>ping_timeout</b> before thinking about also tuning +<b>error_escalation_time</b>. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table> +</blockquote></td></tr></table></td></tr><!--FOOTER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><!--PAGE FOOTER--><tr><td colspan="2"><div align="center"><font color="#525D76" size="-1"><em> + Copyright © 1999-2011, Apache Software Foundation + </em></font></div></td></tr></table></body></html>
\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/workers.html b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/workers.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..3e8c3570 --- /dev/null +++ b/rubbos/app/tomcat-connectors-1.2.32-src/docs/generic_howto/printer/workers.html @@ -0,0 +1,408 @@ +<html><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"><title>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo - Workers HowTo</title><meta name="author" value="Henri Gomez"><meta name="email" value="hgomez@apache.org"><meta name="author" value="Gal Shachor"><meta name="email" value="shachor@il.ibm.com"><meta name="author" value="Mladen Turk"><meta name="email" value="mturk@apache.org"><link href="../../style.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#525D76" alink="#525D76" vlink="#525D76"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><!--PAGE HEADER--><tr><td colspan="2"><!--TOMCAT LOGO--><a href="http://tomcat.apache.org/"><img src="../../images/tomcat.gif" align="left" alt="Apache Tomcat" border="0"></a><!--APACHE LOGO--><a href="http://www.apache.org/"><img src="http://www.apache.org/images/asf-logo.gif" align="right" alt="Apache Logo" border="0"></a></td></tr><!--HEADER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><tr><!--RIGHT SIDE MAIN BODY--><td width="80%" valign="top" align="left"><table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4"><tr><td align="left" valign="top"><h1>The Apache Tomcat Connector - Generic HowTo</h1><h2>Workers HowTo</h2></td><td align="right" valign="top" nowrap="true"><img src="../../images/void.gif" width="1" height="1" vspace="0" hspace="0" border="0"></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Introduction"><strong>Introduction</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +A Tomcat worker is a Tomcat instance that is waiting to execute servlets on behalf of some web server. +For example, we can have a web server such as Apache forwarding servlet requests to a +Tomcat process (the worker) running behind it. +</p> +<p> +The scenario described above is a very simple one; +in fact one can configure multiple Tomcat workers to serve servlets on +behalf of a certain web server. +The reasons for such configuration can be: +</p> +<ul> +<li> +We want different contexts to be served by different Tomcat workers to provide a +development environment where all the developers share the same web server but own a Tomcat worker of their own. +</li> +<li> +We want different virtual hosts served by different Tomcat processes to provide a +clear separation between sites belonging to different companies. +</li> +<li> +We want to provide load balancing, meaning run multiple Tomcat workers each on a +machine of its own and distribute the requests between them. +</li> +</ul> + +<p> +There are probably more reasons for having multiple workers but I guess that this list is enough... +Tomcat workers are defined in a properties file dubbed workers.properties and this tutorial +explains how to work with it. +</p> + +<p> +This document was originally part of <b>Tomcat: A Minimalistic User's Guide</b> written by Gal Shachor, +but has been split off for organisational reasons. +</p> +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Defining Workers"><strong>Defining Workers</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Defining workers to the Tomcat web server plugin can be done using a properties file +(a sample file named workers.properties is available in the conf/ directory). +</p> + +<p> +the file contains entries of the following form: +</p> + +<p> +<b>worker.list</b>=<a comma separated list of worker names> +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # the list of workers + worker.list= worker1, worker2 +</pre></div> + +<p> +When starting up, the web server plugin will instantiate the workers whose name appears in the +<b>worker.list</b> property, these are also the workers to whom you can map requests. The directive can be used multiple times. +</p> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Workers Type"><strong>Workers Type</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Each named worker should also have a few entries to provide additional information on his behalf. +This information includes the worker's type and other related worker information. +Currently the following worker types that exists are (JK 1.2.5): +</p> + +<table> + <tr><th>Type</th><th>Description</th></tr> + <tr><td>ajp12</td><td>This worker knows how to forward requests to out-of-process Tomcat workers using the ajpv12 protocol.</td></tr> + <tr><td>ajp13</td><td>This worker knows how to forward requests to out-of-process Tomcat workers using the ajpv13 protocol.</td></tr> + <tr><td>jni</td><td>DEPRECATED: This worker knows how to forward requests to in-process Tomcat workers using JNI.</td></tr> + <tr><td>lb</td><td>This is a load-balancing worker; it knows how to provide round-robin based sticky load balancing with a certain level of fault-tolerance.</td></tr> + <tr><td>status</td><td>This is a status worker for managing load balancers.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p> +Defining workers of a certain type should be done with the following property format: +</p> + +<p> +<b>worker</b>.<b>worker name</b>.<b>type</b>=<worker type> +Where worker name is the name assigned to the worker and the worker type is one of the four types defined +in the table (a worker name may only contain any space the characters [a-zA-Z0-9\-_]). +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # Defines a worker named "local" that uses the ajpv12 protocol to forward requests to a Tomcat process. + worker.local.type=ajp12 + # Defines a worker named "remote" that uses the ajpv13 protocol to forward requests to a Tomcat process. + worker.remote.type=ajp13 + # Defines a worker named "loadbalancer" that loadbalances several Tomcat processes transparently. + worker.loadbalancer.type=lb +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Setting Worker Properties"><strong>Setting Worker Properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +After defining the workers you can also specify properties for them. +Properties can be specified in the following manner: +</p> + +<p> +worker.<worker name>.<property>=<property value> +</p> + +Each worker has a set of properties that you can set as specified in the following subsections: + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="ajp12 Worker properties"><strong>ajp12 Worker properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p><p><font color="#ff0000"> +The <b>ajp12</b> has been <b>deprecated</b> with Tomcat 3.3.x and you should use instead +<b>ajp13</b> which is the only ajp protocol known by Tomcat 4.x and 5 and 5.5 and Tomcat 6. +</font></p></p> +<p> +The ajp12 typed workers forward requests to out-of-process Tomcat workers +using the ajpv12 protocol over TCP/IP sockets. +</p> + +<p> +the ajp12 worker properties are : +</p> + +<p> +<b>host</b> property sets the host where the Tomcat worker is listening for ajp12 requests. +</p> + +<p> +<b>port</b> property sets the port where the Tomcat worker is listening for ajp12 requests +</p> + +<p> +<b>lbfactor</b> property is used when working with a load balancer worker, this is the load-balancing factor for the worker. +We'll see more on this in the <a href="../../generic_howto/loadbalancers.html">lb worker</a> section. +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # worker "worker1" will talk to Tomcat listening on machine www.x.com at port 8007 using 2 lb factor + worker.worker1.host=www.x.com + worker.worker1.port=8007 + worker.worker1.lbfactor=2 +</pre></div> + +<p> +Notes: In the ajpv12 protocol, connections are created, used and then closed at each request. +The default port for ajp12 is 8007 +</p> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="ajp13 Worker properties"><strong>ajp13 Worker properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +The ajp13 typed workers forward requests to out-of-process Tomcat workers using the ajpv13 protocol over TCP/IP sockets. +The main difference between ajpv12 and ajpv13 are that: +<ul> +<li> +ajpv13 is a more binary protocol and it tries to compress some of the request data by coding +frequently used strings as small integers. +</li> +<li> +ajpv13 reuses open sockets and leaves them open for future requests (remember when you've got a Firewall between your +web server and Tomcat). +</li> +<li> +ajpv13 has special treatment for SSL information so that the container can implement +SSL related methods such as isSecure(). +</li> +</ul> + +</p> + +<p> +You should note that Ajp13 is now the only out-process protocol supported by Tomcat 4.0.x, 4.1.x, 5.0.x, 5.5.x and 6. +</p> + + +<div class="example"><pre> + # worker "worker2" will talk to Tomcat listening on machine www2.x.com at port 8009 using 3 lb factor + worker.worker2.host=www2.x.com + worker.worker2.port=8009 + worker.worker2.lbfactor=3 + # worker "worker2" uses connections, which will stay no more than 10mn in the connection pool + worker.worker2.connection_pool_timeout=600 + # worker "worker2" ask operating system to send KEEP-ALIVE signal on the connection + worker.worker2.socket_keepalive=1 + # mount can be used as an alternative to the JkMount directive + worker.worker2.mount=/contexta /contexta/* /contextb /contextb/* +</pre></div> + +<p> +Notes: In the ajpv13 protocol, the default port is 8009 +</p> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="lb Worker properties"><strong>lb Worker properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +The load-balancing worker does not really communicate with Tomcat workers. +Instead it is responsible for the management of several "real" workers. +This management includes: +</p> + +<ul> +<li> +Instantiating the workers in the web server. +</li> +<li> +Using the worker's load-balancing factor, perform weighed-round-robin load balancing where +high lbfactor means stronger machine (that is going to handle more requests) +</li> +<li> +Keeping requests belonging to the same session executing on the same Tomcat worker. +</li> +<li> +Identifying failed Tomcat workers, suspending requests to them and instead falling-back on +other workers managed by the lb worker. +</li> +</ul> + +<p> +The overall result is that workers managed by the same lb worker are load-balanced (based on their lbfactor and current user session) and also fall-backed so a single Tomcat process death will not "kill" the entire site. +The following table specifies some properties that the lb worker can accept: +<ul> +<li><b>balance_workers</b> is a comma separated list of workers that the load balancer need to manage. +As long as these workers should only be used via the load balancer worker, +there is no need to also put them into the worker.list property. +This directive can be used multiple times for the same load balancer.</li> +<li><b>sticky_session</b> specifies whether requests with SESSION ID's should be routed back to the same +Tomcat worker. Set sticky_session to False when Tomcat is using a Session Manager which +can persist session data across multiple instances of Tomcat. By default sticky_session is set to True.</li> +</ul> +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # The worker balance1 while use "real" workers worker1 and worker2 + worker.balance1.balance_workers=worker1, worker2 +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Status Worker properties"><strong>Status Worker properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +The status worker does not communicate with Tomcat. +Instead it is responsible for the load balancer management. +</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Add the status worker to the worker list + worker.list=jkstatus + # Define a 'jkstatus' worker using status + worker.jkstatus.type=status +</pre></div> +<p>Next thing is to mount the requests to the jkstatus worker. For Apache +web servers use the:</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Add the jkstatus mount point + JkMount /jkmanager/* jkstatus +</pre></div> +<p>To obtain a higher level of security use the:</p> +<div class="example"><pre> + # Enable the JK manager access from localhost only + <Location /jkmanager/> + JkMount jkstatus + Order deny,allow + Deny from all + Allow from 127.0.0.1 + </Location> +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Property file macros"><strong>Property file macros</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +You can define "macros" in the property files. +These macros let you define properties and later on use them while +constructing other properties. +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # property example, like a network base address + mynet=194.226.31 + # Using the above macro to simplify the address definitions + # for a farm of workers. + worker.node1.host=$(mynet).11 + worker.node2.host=$(mynet).12 + worker.node3.host=$(mynet).13 +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#828DA6"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="Hierarchical property configuration"><strong>Hierarchical property configuration</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Workers can reference configurations of other workers. +If worker "x" references worker "y", then it inherits all +configuration parameters from "y", except for the ones +that have explicitly been set for "x". +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # worker toe defines some default settings + worker.toe.type=ajp13 + worker.toe.socket_keepalive=true + worker.toe.connect_timeout=10000 + worker.toe.recovery_options=7 + # workers tic and tac inherit those values + worker.tic.reference=worker.toe + worker.tac.reference=worker.toe +</pre></div> + +<p> +Please note, that the reference contains +the full prefix to the referenced configuration attributes, +not only the name of the referenced worker. +</p> + +<p> +References can be nested. Be careful to avoid loops! +</p> + +<p> +Attributes which are allowed multiple times for a single worker +can not be merged from a worker and a reference. An attribute +is only inherited from a reference, if it is not already set +for the referring worker. +</p> + +<p> +References are especially useful, when configuring load balancers. +Try to understand the following two stage references: +</p> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # We only use one load balancer + worker.list=lb + # Let's define some defaults + worker.basic.port=8009 + worker.basic.type=ajp13 + worker.basic.socket_keepalive=true + worker.basic.connect_timeout=10000 + worker.basic.recovery_options=7 + # And we use them in two groups + worker.lb1.domain=dom1 + worker.lb1.distance=0 + worker.lb1.reference=worker.basic + worker.lb2.domain=dom2 + worker.lb2.distance=1 + worker.lb2.reference=worker.basic + # Now we configure the load balancer + worker.lb.type=lb + worker.lb.method=B + worker.lb.balanced_workers=w11,w12,w21,w22 + worker.w11.host=myhost11 + worker.w11.reference=worker.lb1 + worker.w12.host=myhost12 + worker.w12.reference=worker.lb1 + worker.w21.host=myhost21 + worker.w21.reference=worker.lb2 + worker.w22.host=myhost22 + worker.w22.reference=worker.lb2 +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" width="100%"><tr><td bgcolor="#525D76"><font color="#ffffff" face="arial,helvetica.sanserif"><a name="A sample worker.properties"><strong>A sample worker.properties</strong></a></font></td></tr><tr><td><blockquote> +<p> +Since coping with worker.properties on your own is not an easy thing to do, +a sample worker.properties file is bundled along JK. +</p> + +<p> +You could also find here a sample workers.properties defining : +</p> + +<ul> +<li> +An ajp12 worker that used the host localhost and the port 8007 +</li> +<li> +An ajp13 worker that used the host localhost and the port 8008 +</li> +<li> +An lb worker that load balance the ajp12 and ajp13 workers +</li> +</ul> + +<div class="example"><pre> + # Define 3 workers, 2 real workers using ajp12, ajp13, the last one being a loadbalancing worker + worker.list=worker1, worker2, worker3 + # Set properties for worker1 (ajp12) + worker.worker1.type=ajp12 + worker.worker1.host=localhost + worker.worker1.port=8007 + worker.worker1.lbfactor=1 + # Set properties for worker2 (ajp13) + worker.worker2.type=ajp13 + worker.worker2.host=localhost + worker.worker2.port=8009 + worker.worker2.lbfactor=1 + worker.worker2.connection_pool_timeout=600 + worker.worker2.socket_keepalive=1 + worker.worker2.socket_timeout=60 + # Set properties for worker3 (lb) which use worker1 and worker2 + worker.worker3.balance_workers=worker1,worker2 +</pre></div> + +</blockquote></td></tr></table></td></tr><!--FOOTER SEPARATOR--><tr><td colspan="2"><hr noshade size="1"></td></tr><!--PAGE FOOTER--><tr><td colspan="2"><div align="center"><font color="#525D76" size="-1"><em> + Copyright © 1999-2011, Apache Software Foundation + </em></font></div></td></tr></table></body></html>
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